Termora vs. DocuSign CLM
DocuSign is the standard for electronic signatures. Its CLM product extends into contract management — but the focus is still on the signing workflow. Termora starts where DocuSign ends: tracking what needs to happen when contracts are up for renewal.
Feature comparison
Why teams switch
The DocuSign suite excels at getting a contract drafted, reviewed, approved, and signed. Managing the ongoing lifecycle — notice periods, renewal windows, and deadline reminders — requires additional configuration that isn't the core product focus.
If you have 80 existing contracts that need renewal tracking and you didn't sign them through DocuSign, you're starting from scratch regardless. Termora works from where you are — not from where your signing workflow is.
DocuSign CLM is priced per user, and the CLM tier sits above the base e-signature product. For a team of 5 just needing renewal visibility, the cost-to-outcome ratio doesn't make sense.
What you get
Import existing contracts by uploading documents or entering details manually. Termora tracks your full portfolio from day one — regardless of how those contracts were originally signed.
Termora calculates the action deadline — renewal date minus notice period — automatically. That's the date that actually matters, and it drives all reminder cadences.
You don't need approval workflows, version control, or e-signature tooling to track that a contract renews on March 15th and you need to act by January 15th. Termora is purpose-built for that job.
We use DocuSign for signing. But we were using nothing for tracking what happened after signing. Termora filled exactly that gap.
Daniel W.
Head of Procurement, Nexbridge Corp
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